Memoria] funds between 1 922 and 1 929 in order to put the social sciences on the academic map. In short, the great foundations have proved more re- sponsive to the values of the professionals who run them and of the academic com- munity on whose borders they operate than to those of the rich men who founded them. This, of course, is just what alarms the most articulate viewers- with-alarm of our day-those of the ex- treme Right. Where a Samuel U nter- myer was happy to see little connection between the foundations' policies and those of theIr founders, a Westbrook Pegler boils over regularly when he thInks how Henry Ford's money is being used to thwart Henry Ford's social and economic philosophy, which was almost as narrow as that of Mr. Pegler himself. I N the case of the Ford Foundation, the viewing with alarm was initi- ated by the Chicago Tribune with a news story it printed in 1 951, under the headline "LEFTIST SLANT BEGINS TO SHOW IN FORD TRUST"-the slant being the participation in various Ford Foundation activities of such people as Paul Hoffman, who, as head of the Marshall Plan, had "given away ten billion dollars to foreign countries;" Dr. Reinhold Niebuhr, professor of ApplIed Christianity at the Union Theological Seminary ("pinko tieups"); Supreme Court Justice Owen J. Roberts, "a world government advocate;" and Frank Altschul, "a Roosevelt Republi- can and retired international banker" The Hearst columnists have been sound- ing the tocsin diligently ever since. "Many books and various studies have been financed by tax-free grants from some of these foundations," Fulton Lewis, Jr., wrote a while ago. "In ef- fect, the American people are paying more taxes to finance so-called scholars who work diligently to beat out our brains and change our traditiona1 way of life into something more Socialistic." And George Sokolsky observed, "Henry Ford . . . made nearly all his money in this country, but Pau1 Hoffman, who is spending that money, seems to prefer to pour it into remote bottom- less pits and to expend it for mean- ingless purposes, such as an investiga- tion as to why the world is full of refugees, when, as a matter of fact, it always has been." Mr. Sokolsky also put forth a positive suggestion: "Why cannot some of the money the Ford Foundation is piddling away on trivia be used constructively for the saving of opera?" Even the Foundation's ponderously respectable trustees look 83 ,", t .: '...., t, " ý "'- " Þ- '. "", ", "',, . : :. ,v,, '" --- .....) _.-:::"' -' '::' ':' ; . " " '?L 't' v v :. ;J -:=v: ", þ). ø' .'" ,t I :' ' .. ".",', : 7 " "::':, t.::: ,,-: - .;::; " ><iN ' \. """', P' "" -. ': .. . ,...:' "'.. " '.,' '<v , ..... " "> i "\ . " . ",,:::. 4f" !IIÞ ,'.'.' '\ . .=:,:.. .. "! ", ! . : .:. : f, . ':,' 4 . 1 :: t ^ < , J v"""--- -- ""X*' "* :::.::.::. ...... /" ... >> . ^ $9, $15, $27, $40 (plus tax) NEW purse flacon dramatic black real leather case lined in red holds % ounce L'Heure Bleue or Mitsouko perfumes $5.00 plus/ax < \ MAISON FONoæ EN '828